The American Cinema Editors Eddie Awards are yearly awards from the American Cinema Editors Society since 1962.

Since 2000, the Robert Wise Award is one of the honorary awards handed out at the ACE Eddie Awards. It is given to a critic, reviewer or writer who has best illuminated the creative work of film editing.

The Art Director's Guild Excellence in Production Design Awards are annually awards presented by the Art Directors Guild since 1996. The awards for the nominated productions were given the following year.

The American Latino Media Arts Awards or ALMA Awards have been presented by the National Council of La Raza since 1995 and are awarded to performers and artists whose talent enhances the image of Latinos in American media. Between 1995 and 1997 the awards were known as NCLR Bravo Awards. In 1995, Ricardo Montalban received the Ricardo Montalban Lifetime Achievement Award. The following years industry professionals were awarded with this honorary award including Henry Darrow in 2012 and Tony Plana in 2013. For undisclosed reasons, the awards were not given between 2003 and 2005 and also not in 2010.

The Annie Awards are annual awards which honor achievement in film, video, television and advertising animation including voice-over performers and production staff since 1972. There was no award ceremony in 2002. Among the past hosts of the ceremonies are William Shatner (2009) and Maurice LaMarche (2000 and 2013).

The Artios Awards are awards handed out for Excellence in Casting and have been presented since 1985 by the Casting Society of America. The award events are held annually simultaneously in New York and Los Angeles.

The ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards are handed out by the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers to recognize musical compositions from the top films and television and the most frequently performed themes and scores. No nominees are announced- only winners. The awards have been handed out annually since 1986.

The Blockbuster Entertainment Awards were annual awards between 1995 and 2001 hosted by the company Blockbuster LLC. Following seven award ceremonies the company decided to cancel the awards following the attacks of the 11 September.

Kelsey Grammer hosted the second award show in 1996. In 1998, Ashley Judd received a nomination in the category Favorite Actress - Suspense for Kiss the Girls, while Patrick Stewart won the award in the category Favorite Supporting Actor - Suspense for Conspiracy Theory and Winona Ryder won the award in the category Favorite Supporting Actress - Sci-Fi for Alien: Resurrection. Ashley Judd received another nomination for Kiss the Girls the following year in the category Favorite Actress - Video while Becky Ann Baker was nominated for Favorite Supporting Actress - Suspense for her work in A Simple Plan. Winona Ryder received her second nomination in 2000 in the category Favorite Actress - Drama for Girl, Interrupted. Also in 2000, Ashley Judd won the award in the category Favorite Actress - Suspense for Double Jeopardy, James Cromwell received a nomination as Favorite Supporting Actor - Suspense for The General's Daughter, Bruce Greenwood as Favorite Supporting Actor - Suspense for Double Jeopardy, and Michael Clarke Duncan in the category Favorite Supporting Actor - Drama for The Green Mile. Famke Janssen also received a nomination in the category Favorite Supporting Actress - Horror for House on Haunted Hill. During the final award ceremony in 2001, Patrick Stewart received another nomination in the category Favorite Actor - Science Fiction for X-Men, Kirsten Dunst received a nomination as Favorite Actress - Comedy for Bring It On, Vanessa Williams was nominated as Favorite Actress - Action for Shaft, Michael Clarke Duncan was nominated as Favorite Supporting Actor - Comedy/Romance for The Whole Nine Yards, and Famke Janssen was nominated as Favorite Supporting Actress - Science Fiction for X-Men.

The BMI Film & TV Awards are annual awards since 1985 handed out by the Broadcast Music, Inc. The Film & TV Awards are only one category, others include the Latin Awards, Urban Awards, Pop Awards, and Country Awards among others. The Broadcast Music, Inc. is a performing right organization founded in 1939.

The Bogey Award is a German Film Award handed out by the film magazine Blickpunkt:Film since 1997. It is also known as Box Office Germany Award. The award itself, the "Bogey", is a statue of actor Humphrey Bogart and can be received in bronze, silver, gold, platin or titanium depending on how many people went out to watch the film following its start. Since 2009 there is also the 3D-Bogey.

Star Trek: Insurrection is so far the only Trek film which received a Bogey Award in silver, for two million viewers in twenty days following the premiere.

The Boston Society of Film Critics Awards are annual awards since 1981 to make "Boston's unique critical perspective heard on a national and international level by awarding commendations to the best of the year's films and filmmakers and local film theaters and film societies that offer outstanding film programming". [1]

The Britannia Awards are annual awards by the Los Angeles division of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Though first handed out in 1989, the first official award ceremony was in 1991. Only in 2001 no ceremony was held and no award was presented.

Whoopi Goldberg hosted the award ceremony at the 10th Britannia Awards in 2000.

The California on Location Awards are annual awards since 1995 which honor location professionals, production companies and public employees for professional excellence while working on location in the State of California.

The DVD Exclusive Awards were awards in the years 2001, 2003, 2005, and 2006 which honored the best achievement on DVD releases. Starting out as the Video Premiere Awards in 2001 and 2002, it was rechristened DVD Premiere Awards in 2003, before being rechristened again.

Star Trek has won 34 Emmy Awards out of 155 nominations spanning from 1967 to 2005. Remarkably, a solid third of the (co-)nominations went to the three most honored Star Trek staffers, Michael Westmore, Dan Curry and Ron B. Moore, sharing 56 nominations between them (24 ,19 and 13 respectively), (co-)winning 17 of them (5, 7 and 5 respectively), and which, incredibly (considering the huge number of people who have worked on the franchise over the decades), accounted for no less than half of the total wins. The record for Westmore is even more impressive as he is the only Star Trek staffer to have received nominations in every single year, from 1988 through 2005, in which the modern television franchise was in production, on six occasions even being nominated twice. Coincidentally, the most award winning staffer, Dan Curry, also holds the record with the most single year nominations, four in 1999, though only winning one of them that year.

Of the six Trek television shows, TNG has been nominated and won the most (18 wins out of 58 nominations). TOS has been nominated and won the least (0 out of 13). Trek's single best year at the Emmy's was 1993 when between them, TNG and DS9 scored 5 wins out of 12 nominations.

Star Trek: The Animated Series is the only Star Trek series to have won a "major" Emmy Award. It won the Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Entertainment Children's Series in 1975. Both The Original Series and The Next Generation were nominated for Best Dramatic or Drama Series, TOS in its first two years and TNG in its last, but neither won. Among actors, only Leonard Nimoy has ever been nominated for supporting actor in a drama or series and he was nominated three times. But he never won.

Unsurprisingly, most of Star Trek's nominations and wins have been in the technical categories, most predominantly visual effects, but there were also a few in the more non-technical "artistic" major categories such as makeup and hairstyling. Other "artistic" categories where Star Trek did chalk up some early nominations and a few wins included writing, acting, producing, directing, music, art direction, title design, as well as main costume design, whereas the more technical categories, besides visual effects, included categories such as editing, sound mixing, and sound editing.

It should be noted that prior to the mid-1980s the visual effects category did not exist. In the 1960s they were part of a rather non-descript category called "Special Classification of Individual Achievements", whereas they were lumped together in an equally non-descript "Art Direction" category for the 1970s and most of the 1980s. It was due to the lobbying efforts of among others Dan Curry, and more specifically Ronald B. Moore, who was a voting member of the Television Academy prior to his involvement with Star Trek, that visual effects was split off into a category onto its own. However, this had a side-effect as more technical categories were added due to the growing technical sophistication of television productions, and as a result the behind the scenes technical categories were split off from the more "artistic" main categories. From the split onward the technical awards were awarded the weekend prior to the artistic Emmy Award ceremony as the "Creative Arts Emmys Show". This part of the Emmy Awards ceremonies habitually receives hardly any media coverage, if at all, as opposed to the very much publicized about, highly glamorous major, or "real" as Ron B. Moore had coined them, Emmy Awards. (Flying Starships, pp. 107-115) Moore has also reported that the later slew of award wins and nominations by the technical Star Trek staffers over the years and almost none whatsoever in any of the "real" Emmy Award categories has caused somewhat of an envious rift between the technical and the more artistic side of Star Trek's staff and cast, having stated, "There were times when I felt that winning an Emmy really worked against us". In line with this, Moore has also noted that CaptainJonathan Archer actor Scott Bakula was the only cast member who ever took the trouble of congratulating the visual effects staff in person with their later wins, unsurprisingly endearing him to Moore. (Flying Starships, p. 112)

Not only this, but the Academy itself has exhibited a certain amount of disdain for the Star Trek franchise on at least one occasion, as Moore recalled, when he was co-nominated with Curry in the visual effects category for the season threeThe Next Generation episode "Déjà Q" during the 1990 ceremony. Apart from this episode, "Tin Man" was also nominated (with Robert Legato and Gary Hutzel as nominees), together with three non-Star Trek productions. In a bizarre turn of events all three non-Star Trek productions received the award due to a three-way tie, leaving the two Star Trek productions sole losers. In a calculated scoffing, the organization had Next Generation cast members Michael Dorn and Marina Sirtis purposely present the awards. Unaware of the set-up, both were horrified when they had to announce the winners, to which a thoroughly chagrined Moore added, "To add insult to injury they sent me a video copy of the award show so I can live it over and over." (Flying Starships, pp. 109-110) Nevertheless, all the snubbed Star Trek staffers went on to receive multiple Emmy Award wins.

The contrast between the "artistic" and "technical" award nominations had an even more ironic aspect as far as the visual effects were concerned. While the executors of the visual effects were showered with nominations, none of those who came up with the concepts in the first place, the production illustrators (the title being introduced in the franchise with Star Trek: The Motion Picture, and traditionally thought of as "artistic"), ever were, with the sole exception of Matt Jefferies in 1968.

In the table below, the year given is the year of the award. The period of contention for the award is from the fall of the previous year to the summer of the current year, which corresponds to a television season.

FantastiCon was an annual three-day science fiction and fantasy convention which also celebrated the achievements of production staffers in these genres, complete with award presentations and ceremonies. The event was founded in 1996 by Star Trek guest actor William Campbell as a charity in order to raise funds for the Motion Picture & Television Fund, a charitable organization that offered assistance and care to those in the motion picture industry with limited or no resources. All the proceeds went to the Motion Picture & Television Fund. (Beyond the Clouds, p. 274: Star Trek: The Magazine Volume 1, Issue 13, p. 53) The award ceremony typically took place on the first evening of the event at a gala awards dinner and there were two award categories. Several honorary Shooting Star Awards were presented to individuals whose work had been instrumental in the evolution of science-fiction entertainment. The single, most prestigious one was the Gene Roddenberry Award, so christened by Campbell to express the fondness he always had for the Star Trek franchise, even though the convention habitually celebrated other franchises. The fifth, 2000, edition however, FantastiCon V 2K, held from 14 through 16 July in Los Angeles, was Star Trek-themed and was well represented by Star Trek cast and production staffers, old and new. Several staffers were awarded on the occasion. [X]wbm Unfortunately, upon the failing health and ultimate death of its founder, the convention has become defunct.

The Genesis Awards are annual awards handed out by The Humane Society of the United States to people from and productions of the entertainment and news media for their support against and public awareness of animal issues.

The Golden Reel Awards are annual awards since 1954 handed out by the Motion Picture Sound Editors honoring special achievements of the sound editors, music editors, sound designers and since 2006 also foley artists.

The Grammy Awards, originally named the Gramophone Awards, are presented annually by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences of the United States for outstanding achievements in the music industry.

The Hollywood Film Festival Awards are an annual festival since 1997. Among the awards handed out are the Hollywood Film Award, the Hollywood Movie Award, and the Hollywood Discovery Award among others.

The Hollywood Makeup Artist and Hair Stylist Guild Awards were annual awards presented to honor Makeup Artists and Hair Stylists for their work. The awards were presented between 2000 and 2004 in Los Angeles, California, USA.

The Hugo Awards, named for Amazing Stories pulp magazine founder Hugo Gernsbach, are awarded annually for the best in science fiction and fantasy. The awards are administered by the World Science Fiction Convention, also known as Worldcon.

The IFMCA Awards, or International Film Music Critics Association Awards, are annual awards since 1998 handed out by the International Film Music Critics Association and honoring original film and television music. There were no awards given between the years 2000 and 2003.

The National Board of Review Awards are annual awards since 1920 handed out by the National Board of Review which is including film professionals, teachers, students and historians. There were no award ceremonies prior to 1932.

The George Foster Peabody Awards are awarded annually for excellence in radio and television, and, recently, for other electronic media as well. The awards are administered by the University of Georgia, from an endowment by George Foster Peabody, a philanthropist.

The Razzie Awards, also known as Golden Raspberry Awards, are annual awards since 1981 which honor the worst achievement in films. Presented by the Golden Raspberry Award Foundation, the Razzie Awards are presented every year one day before the annual Academy Awards.

The Saturn Awards, previously known as the Golden Scrolls and Science Fiction Film Awards, have been handed out annually by the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films since 1973. They were founded by film historian Dr. Donald A. Reed.

The Scream Awards are annual awards since 2006 honoring the best of science fiction, horror and fantasy and were formerly known as Spike Scream Awards. They were produced by Spike TV. There was no award ceremony in 2012.

Prior to the official SAG Awards, the SAG and AFTRA gave out the Life Achievement Awards every year beginning in 1963. Brock Peters received this award in 1991 and Ricardo Montalban in 1994. George Coe received the Ralph Morgan Award in 2009 and Joseph Ruskin in 2011.

The Science, Engineering & Technology Awards are awards for Excellence in the Portrayal of Science, Engineering, and Technology. They are produced by the Entertainment Industries Council, Inc. (EIC) and The Boeing Company and presented in Los Angeles, California. [15][16]

The SFX Awards are annual awards voted by the readers of the British genre magazine SFX. The first awards were handed out in 1997. After a few years without awards they were brought back in 2002. Since 2002 they were presented annually except 2006 and 2009.

The Taurus World Stunt Awards have been handed out yearly since 2001 except in 2006 to the best stunt performers in the business. The awards have been presented by the Taurus World Stunt Academy and the statue is representing a bull.

The Teen Choice Awards are annual awards since 1999 airing on FOX Network. Until 2002 it was organized by Seventeen magazine. In 2003, Teen People Magazine took over. The awards honor the year's biggest achievement in categories such as television, movies, music, fashion, and sport.

The VES Awards have been handed out annually since 2003 by The Visual Effects Society, an organization comprised of visual effects professionals, whose objective it is to honor achievements in the field of visual effects, advance the art and science of visual effects, and promote visual effects for its membership and the industry as a whole.

Stan Lee received a Lifetime Achievement Award in 2012. Ed Catmull received the Melies Award in 2010 and Douglas Trumbull in 2012. Trumbull also received the Honorary Membership in 2002 and the Lifetime Membership in 2009. Albert Whitlock received the Honorary Membership in 1998, John Dykstra in 2007, and Matthew Yuricich in 2010. John Dykstra will also receive the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2014.

The Young Artist Awards, formerly known as the Youth in Film Awards, are annual awards since 1980 given to young performers to honor their work in film and television who are seeking a future in the entertainment industry.